Principles and Problems of Right Thinking: A Textbook for Logic, Reflective Thinking, and Orientation CoursesHarper & brothers, 1931 - 529 pages |
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Page 245
... whole field proportion as they are distributed throughout the whole field . Secur- If , for example , we were studying habits of church attendance ing a in a given community , it would be necessary to have the same repre- proportion of ...
... whole field proportion as they are distributed throughout the whole field . Secur- If , for example , we were studying habits of church attendance ing a in a given community , it would be necessary to have the same repre- proportion of ...
Page 249
... whole . When an in- possible spector examines a carload of wheat , he samples the grain at and no random from different parts of the car , for there seems to be circum- no reason why a sufficient number of such selections of a sup ...
... whole . When an in- possible spector examines a carload of wheat , he samples the grain at and no random from different parts of the car , for there seems to be circum- no reason why a sufficient number of such selections of a sup ...
Page 453
... whole lying in the fact that as imagination is stimulated by enjoyment of a part of the object to picture the larger whole that would more fully satisfy , it only needs follow the play of attention to other parts of the object to see ...
... whole lying in the fact that as imagination is stimulated by enjoyment of a part of the object to picture the larger whole that would more fully satisfy , it only needs follow the play of attention to other parts of the object to see ...
Contents
THINKING AND RIGHT THINKING | 3 |
REFLECTIVE THINKING AND ITS ALTERNATIVES | 18 |
HINDRANCES AND AIDS TO RIGHT THINKING | 31 |
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accepted Accordingly æsthetic affirmed affirms the consequents analysis answer appear apply assumption astronomy beliefs body causal cause chapter clearly complete conception conclusion Congress connection Constitution contrapositive correct correlation course deduction definite denies the antecedent difficulty disjunctive disjunctive syllogism earth empiricism ence enthymeme entire essential exact experience experimental control fact factors fallacy formulation function Galileo gisms given guiding human hypothesis hypothetical syllogism ideas illustration inference interest involved knowledge logical major premise mathematical matter meaning ment method method of agreement mind modus tollens motion nature objects observation occurrence phenomena possible predicate term predict present principle prob problem proposition quantity question reached reasoning reflective thinking relation result revealed RIGHT THINKING scientific scientific method situation social solution specific step suggestion Suppose syllogism symbols theory things tion tive transitive relation true universal valid velocity verified